Ukraine Says 100,000 Russian Troops Near Border

Mar. 27, 2014 - 08:20PM
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A Russian national flag, left, and a partially seen flag of Russian airborne forces flies March 27 at a former Ukrainian military base in Perevalnoye, near the Crimean capital Simferopol. (Dmitry Serebryakov / Getty Images)

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WASHINGTON — Nearly 100,000 Russian forces have massed on Ukraine’s border, a top Ukrainian defense official told an American audience Thursday, giving a number far higher than US military estimates.

“Almost 100,000 soldiers are stationed on the borders of Ukraine and in the direction ... of Kharkiv, Donetsk,” Andriy Parubiy, chairman of Ukraine’s national security council, said via a webcast from Kiev.

“Russian troops are not in Crimea only, they are along all Ukrainian borders. They’re in the south, they’re in the east and in the north,” Parubiy said.

After its intervention in the Crimean Peninsula, Russia is plotting to foment separatist sentiment elsewhere and Kiev fears a possible incursion in the country’s east, he told the Atlantic Council, a Washington think tank.

Parubiy said any day “we might see a huge attack on the territory of continental Ukraine and we are getting ready for it.”

Although US defense officials have put the number of Russian troops closer to 20,000, a US lawmaker said Thursday that much stronger Russian forces had deployed towards Ukraine’s border.

“Over the past week we’ve seen the buildup of up to 80,000 additional Russian troops,” Rep. Mike Turner said in a statement.

Turner said the force included large numbers of armored vehicles, battle tanks, artillery, helicopters and planes.

The Republican lawmaker accused the White House of withholding “critical” information about the full scope of Russian troop movements and demanded the administration reveal what it knows to help “vulnerable allies.”

Pentagon officials previously have said more than 20,000 Russian troops — including airborne units and armored vehicles — have deployed along Ukraine’s border, a force big enough to seize control of the eastern region.

But a senior defense official expressed skepticism at Parubiy’s estimate of Russian troop strength.

He declined to discuss US intelligence assessments on the possibility of a Russian attack into eastern Ukraine but said the military presence only served to aggravate tensions.

Kirby said that “regardless of the intent, it does nothing to de-escalate the tension in Ukraine.

“It does nothing to improve the stability in that part of the world.”

Parubiy said the Ukrainian government supported moves by Western countries to impose punitive sanctions on Russia and appealed for a public display of military partnership to send a signal to Moscow over its actions.

“We are calling on our partners to hold a common military exercise” that would “show that the cooperation and partnership is still there,” he said through an interpreter.

He urged “visible support, visible presence of our partners” at this moment of crisis.

The Russian troops that have deployed in Crimea were well-trained special forces, he said.

After Russia’s takeover of Crimea, Moscow had launched a new strategy aimed at disrupting Ukraine’s upcoming presidential elections in May, according to Parubiy.

Kiev authorities had “arrested” separatist leaders in the east and Moscow’s attempts to provoke street demonstrations were faltering with fewer people turning out for the protests, he said.

US President Barack Obama and NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen have both denounced Moscow’s incursion into Crimea but have called for a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

NATO has bolstered its presence in Eastern Europe since Russia’s intervention, deploying radar surveillance aircraft to the area while Washington has sent F-16 fighter jets to Poland.

Obama has ruled out military action in Ukraine, which is not a member of the NATO alliance.